Pardes Hanna


This shabbat we visited our beautiful friends who made aliyah from Sharon, MA to Pardes Hana. Established in 1929, this charming 40,000+ family town was funded by the Rothchilds and named after Chana Rothchild. Walking to the large shul (Beit chneset hagadol) on shabbat day, a display of bulletin boards explained the history of the town, how it was mapped out and was embracing to teymanim that made aliyah pre the establishment of the State of Israel.

Friday night we went to a pop up minyan led by the famous Yonina (Yoni) and Yitzchak Meir, who live in the neighborhood. The carlebach tunes were uplifting and much needed after a long week. The week prior members of this kid friendly minyan davened in a local park. This seemed to confuse members where to go. 

Pardes Hana is increasing in real estate value thanks to the train station that connects the area to Tel Aviv within 40 minutes. There's a direct bus to Jerusalem that takes over an hour and 15 minutes. The flat houses (purposeful), dirt along the roads, and sidewalks in some but not all areas reminded us of Boca Raton, Florida. The nighttime was chilly and the air crisp. 

The neighborhood has in the center of town health food stores, doctors offices, a sushi store, a burger bar (not to be confused as burgers bar), supermarkets, toy stores, hair salons, post office and many other things. What surprised us was that we thought Pardes Hana would be small but it is actually very spread out. High risers are slowly being added due to increasing demand. The next nearest (more affordable) town is Harish, though we learned it might be this way due to air pollution.

Given front, side or back yards, many have trampolines and there weren't too many public parks. The overall vibe felt rustic, slightly hippie, and chilonim who drive on shabbat. 

Whereas in some cases Josh speaks Hebrew only to be answered in English, Pardes Hana has a lower Anglo community in which the Israelis really do not know how to answer in English. It was refreshing to see this cross pollination. 

We enjoyed seeing a little porcupine under a car, the bright orange chicken crossing the street and fruit trees (oranges, clementine, blueberries, kumkwats, lemons). Beautiful flowers and greenery. The main road, הדקלים is adorned with beautiful palm trees on both sides. Some so old that have been there for a long time and eucoliptous trees.

If your are looking for a suburb connected to public transportation, and don't mind being a little distance away from Jerusalem, and have money, Pardes Hana can be a wonderful landing spot for pioneers ready to skip the soft American landings available in Israel. 

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